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Longtime city employee Bridget Collins-Greenwald is enjoying her new role β Licenses and Inspections Commissioner for Quality of Life.
βI love to be able to help people,β she said.
Collins-Greenwald is a Tacony native who attended St. Leo Elementary School and St. Hubert High School (class of 1988). She earned a business marketing degree from Drexel in 1993 (and later a masterβs in human resources management from Holy Family University) and began working at SEPTA as a safety program data analyst, a job she enjoyed.
Next, she worked in marketing for a law firm, a position she hated.
Ultimately, she took the cityβs management trainee exam and did well enough to land a job in the personnel department. Since then, sheβs risen the ranks, transferring to L&I for 11 years, including a stint as deputy commissioner under Fran Burns, a St. Hubert graduate who is now a vice president for the Connelly Foundation.
Collins-Greenwald later became a deputy managing director and in 2012 was named commissioner of the Department of Public Property.
In February, Mayor Cherelle Parker announced she was splitting the duties of L&I. While Collins-Greenwald would focus on quality-of-life issues, Basil Merenda would lead an inspections, safety and compliance division.
βThe splitting of L&I is great,β Collins-Greenwald said.
City Councilman Mike Driscoll chairs Councilβs L&I Committee and oversaw an 11-member task force that produced a report recommending splitting the department
Parker said she split duties due to the βmission creepβ of L&I becoming the default department for nuisance and quality-of-life issues.
Collins-Greenwald, who lives in Pine Valley and is just shy of 27 years with the city, said the splitting of the understaffed L&I was a βlong time coming.β She appreciates Parkerβs faith and confidence in her, and that she understands she has a big responsibility in her new role, which mixes public education and enforcement.
Among the things that fall under her department are dumping on vacant properties, illegal auto repair businesses, pop-up street businesses, bedbug infestations and AirBnB regulations.
Parker issued an executive order splitting L&I, and Collins-Greenwald and Merenda officially began work on March 4.
City Council is expected to pass legislation creating a Home Rule Charter change that voters will have to approve to make the L&I split permanent.
L&I does not oversee the Community Life Improvement Program, which is now under the new city Office of Clean and Green Initiatives. L&I also doesnβt control 311, which is under the auspices of the managing directorβs office.
But Collins-Greenwald will be teaming with CLIP, 311 and other agencies such as the commerce and health departments and the Philadelphia Parking Authority.
Collins-Greenwalk encourages people to make a 311 service request by phone, through an online form or on the mobile app.
The new commissioner plans meetings with each district councilperson to find out the quality-of-life needs of all communities.
βWeβre going to meet with them and be proactive,β she said. βWe want to blanket large areas. There will be a comprehensive approach to everything we do.β β’β’